what is the difference in thickness of limbs when making fiberglass wood laminated limbs vs all wood? If they are the same length, width and weight, is the difference in thickness between materials as extreme as I'm finding?
To be clear, I'm most interested in making all wood bows, screw fiberglass. I'm trying to make hickory backed 1/8") maple and whit oak limbs right now. They are 1.5" wide (should have gone with 1.75) 25" long (minus 3" for pad area) of consistent thickness, tapering to 5/8" wide starting at 10" from the butt end. I expect the laminated limbs to be around 7/16" thick at completion
My riser is 15" long. Im shooting for 50-60lbs.
I recently made a takedown bow, solid hickory riser and solid hickory dry heat bent recurve limbs. I just used limbs from a broken self bow at around 7/16" thick. When I look up laminates limb thickness with fiberglass, I'm finding total limb thickness around .25 inches for bows with similar specs.
QUESTION: are all wood limbs on a takedowns really suppose to be this much thicker than wood fiberglass laminates? Is it possibly because I'm making pyramid style limbs that my limbs are so much thicker? I bought some fiberglass to try as a backing but I rather stick with wood. I already tried .25" thick recurve limbs that were solid hickory, I got between 10-20 lbs of draw weight.
Ideally I'd like to put two pieces of wood through the thickness planer, one at 1/8" the other at 5/16, taper their width to 1/2-5/8, heat bend them for reflex then epoxy them together. With that technique i could make make limbs so much faster and with less chance of mistakes compared to laminating multiple layers with a homemade core taper. Thoughts on this technique?
Sorry for the garbled message, difficult to type on the phone. Thanks for the help!